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:::*I think 'extermination' is a better word than 'examination', but YMMV. [[User:Lepricavark|Lepricavark]] ([[User talk:Lepricavark|talk]]) 02:09, 29 November 2019 (UTC)
:::*I think 'extermination' is a better word than 'examination', but YMMV. [[User:Lepricavark|Lepricavark]] ([[User talk:Lepricavark|talk]]) 02:09, 29 November 2019 (UTC)
*'''Delete''': Not a broad enough topic for a portal. [[User:ToThAc|ToThAc]] ([[User talk:ToThAc|talk]]) 21:12, 25 November 2019 (UTC)
*'''Delete''': Not a broad enough topic for a portal. [[User:ToThAc|ToThAc]] ([[User talk:ToThAc|talk]]) 21:12, 25 November 2019 (UTC)
* '''Keep''' on the grounds of capricious and arbitrary standards with no apparent basis in policy and no broad community consensus. Page views has nothing to do with deletion policy and never has. The "effort applied" standard would work equally to everything ever written about the Kardashians and professional wrestling, but we don't delete those either, much to my dismay. The words used in the nomination are "use common sense" but what it actually says is {{tq|here are some completely random standards I made up one day, so let's use those as if they are policy}}.
: [[Cart before the horse|Dearest cart and horse]] you seem to have gotten things the wrong way round. In the absence of a community consensus for a deletion policy, go find a community consensus for a deletion policy. Don't instead roll a few 20-sided die and decide that those are the standards we should be applying, 100 views, 2 maintainers, 6 partridges, 2 pair trees, and a business proposal filled out in triplicate with quarterly wage reports. And especially when you are not even consistent in applying your arbitrary and capricious standard across discussions: {{tq|any portal with fewer than 25 a day can be considered to have failed}} but we should [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Miscellany_for_deletion/Portal:Culture delete this one anyway].
: If this is par for the course on portal deletions, then no wonder this is so controversial, because we can't even be consistent in applying our capricious and arbitrary standards. [[User:GreenMeansGo|<span style="font-family:Impact"><span style="color:#07CB4B">G</span><span style="color:#449351">M</span><span style="color:#35683d">G</span></span>]][[User talk:GreenMeansGo#top|<sup style="color:#000;font-family:Impact">talk</sup>]] 19:50, 29 November 2019 (UTC)

Revision as of 19:50, 29 November 2019

Portal:Maryland (edit | talk | history | links | watch | logs)

Portal:Maryland was the subject of some undiscussed edits in October 2019 by User:Northamerica1000 in order to improve it. The edits were reverted by User:BrownHairedGirl, and what is being discussed now is the pre-October version. This US state portal had an average of |15 daily pageviews in the first half of 2019, which is unchanged from the |15 daily pageviews in the first two months of 2019. During the first half of 2019, the article Maryland had 3180 daily pageviews.

    • A portal that consistently has only 15 daily pageviews is not providing a useful service to readers who wish to navigate articles about the state or to see a showcase of articles about the state. The effort applied to portal maintenance would be better applied to improving articles to GA or FA standing, or to improving of categories or lists.
    • The intended Portal Guidelines were never approved by a consensus of the Wikipedia community, and we have never had real portal guidelines. We should therefore use common sense, which is discussed in Wikipedia in the essay section Use Common Sense and in the article common sense. The portal guidelines were an effort to codify common sense about portals, and we should still use common sense. It is still a matter of common sense that portals should be about broad subject areas that will attract large numbers of viewers and will attract portal maintainers. (There never was an actual guideline referring to broad subject areas, and the abstract argument that a topic is a broad subject area is both a handwave and meaningless.) Common sense imposes at least a three-part test for portals to satisfy common sense: (1) a broad subject area, demonstrated a posteriori by a breadth of selected articles (not only by an a priori claim that a topic is broad) (the number of articles in appropriate categories is an indication of potential breadth of coverage, but actual breadth of coverage should be required); (2) a large number of viewers, preferably at least 100 a day, but any portal with fewer than 25 a day can be considered to have failed; (3) portal maintenance, (a) with at least two maintainers to provide backup, with a maintenance plan indicating how the portal will be maintained (b) the absence of any errors indicating lack of maintenance (including failure to list dates of death in biographies). Some indication of how any selected articles were selected (e.g., Featured Article or Good Article status, selection by categories, etc.) is also desirable. Any portal that does not pass these common-sense tests is not useful as a navigation tool, for showcasing, or otherwise.
    • Special:PrefixIndex/Portal:Maryland/ (before the reverted edits) shows 6 biographies and 6 general articles, and a lot of calendar events. The biographies, and articles 2 through 5, were forked in 2007 (by a now-banned user), and have had only minor edits. Articles 1 and 6 were written as subpages in 2007, and do not correspond to articles in article space. They do not "rot" because they do not get out of line with the articles, because there are no articles, and so no routine review process.
    • Examination of the (reverted) efforts to renovate the portal shows that it would have displayed 22 Featured Articles, 30 Good Articles, and 21 selected articles (with no explanation of how the 21 articles were selected). That might have been an improvement, although it should have been discussed. It is very unlikely that any improvement in the portal would increase the viewing rate by a significant factor.
    • There is no short-term reason to expect that a re-creation of this portal will address the problems. Any proposed re-creation of this portal using a more modern design, and taking into account the failures of many portals, and including a maintenance plan (since lack of maintenance is a problem with most portals), can go to Deletion Review. Robert McClenon (talk) 21:15, 22 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete per the nom Robert McClenon. Long abandoned Bonsai portal on a narrow topic. States, counties, and villages do not need a portal, and seven months of MfD has shown many dozens of these portals that failed because they, like this portal, were not about topics broad enough to attract readers and maintainers. The undiscussed and usually exceedingly poor one off update NA1K performed on this portal and dozens of others means nothing, as it is not sustained maintenance or by a topic knowledgeable editor. Has very low views, and the news section all dates to 2007. The vastly more viewed B-Class head article Maryland, which also has many rich and versatile navboxes, are all readers need for exploring this topic. Newshunter12 (talk) 21:45, 22 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Since when do we care about page views in deletion discussions? GMGtalk 22:22, 22 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
@GMG Page views have been a core part of many hundreds of portal MfD's in the past seven months. Portals do not have their own content and their only utility is as navigational devices. The logical core measurement of this utility and topic broadness is page views (a useful portal on a broad topic would have a large number of readers and maintainers), and there is a very strong relationship between a portal with low page views and a portal that has been rationally abandoned by editors (because it adds no value to exploring the topic over the head article + navboxes). Newshunter12 (talk) 23:04, 22 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Okay. But a page that has 15 views per day doesn't really need to updated all that much does it? Regardless of what the portal wars have given us, page views have never in any other context been a legitimate measure of educational usefulness. Neither has the number of people maintaining a page. It seems the only relevant statistic here is how many viewers clicked through to another page, which I don't know that anyone has examined. GMGtalk 23:14, 22 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Many portals were deleted earlier this year for failing to comply with WP:POG, which mandates high page views and maintenance. Indeed, one version defined a broad subject as one well viewed and maintained, leading to the bizarre deletion of "narrow" portals such as Culture. Although POG is now recognised as a failed proposal, a Woozle effect set in, with early results being cited as precedent for deleting similar portals. Certes (talk) 00:02, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Well that's all a bit silly isn't it? GMGtalk 00:45, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
too broad a topic to actually be useful as a portal Given that this portal is nominated for being too narrow, certainly looks a lot like a group of users opposed to portals in principle using any argument available to delete them. GMGtalk 22:19, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep for now, and consider restoring the recent changes described on the talk page. It is inappropriate to list an old version of the portal for deletion whilst the reversion of those improvements is being considered by ArbCom. I have notified WT:WikiProject Maryland. Certes (talk) 22:26, 22 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Strong keep, page views are not a good argument for deletion per WP:ATA, no matter how many times this assertion (unsupported by any policy) is repeated. The effort applied to this MfD would be better spent fixing typos elsewhere. The portal has an updated version, so I fail to see how the outdatedness of the currently displayed version is relevant (you could have just reverted to NA1k's version to fix this). Some of the many GAs and FAs from Portal:Maryland roads could be used as extra quality content if that portal ends up deleted. So yeah, broad subject area, recently updated, deletion would lose the valuable resource Portal:Maryland/On this day that isn't duplicated anywhere else. Deletion would clearly make Wikipedia worse. —Kusma (t·c) 13:52, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep' POG is a failed guideline, and page views are not IMO a good measure for deletion. Attempts to obtain community-wide consenssu to delete mall or most portals have failed, but those who favor such an outcome seem intent on deleting them one at a time. I see no valid reason for deletion here. DES (talk)DESiegel Contribs 15:19, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep - The fact that an editor reverted another editor's potential improvements strikes me as odd as the changes were not controversial. WP:ATA states that numbers can not be used as a factor for deletion. Yes they are an indication that something may be wrong, but views can depend on a number of factors. I do not see the nominator taking into account things like poor linking, excluded from smartphone view, and Wikipedia not being a popularity contest. - Knowledgekid87 (talk) 16:51, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
@Knowledgekid87: poor linking doesn't apply here. This portal has links from 1719 articles, from 982 categories, and from 10521 talk pages. It is more collegial is editors make some attempt to check the numbers before making assertions which are easily disproven. Having done link cleanup for hundreds of portals, those figures place in the upper quarter of the portals which have been deleted at MFD, so the question is why such a well-linked portal is so spurned by readers.
As to exclusion from smartphone view, that applies to all portals (and also to all categories and navboxes). If and when a decision is made to display some or all navigational elements in mobile view, and if portals are part of that, then all portals will get more visible links. So the current exclusion doesn't explain why this portal gets only 15 views per day, putting it in the 68th percentile of all portals ranked by pageviews. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 18:41, 29 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Untrue. @Knowledgekid87, please check your facts before making demonstrably false assertions. I reverted to a version which was 11 days old[2]: Reverted on 16:45, 12 October 2019 to Revision as of 16:49, 1 October 2019.
As with each of the reverts which I made that day, I studied the history and reverted to the most recent working version which did not include a "black box" format of list. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 20:04, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I did not catch the fact that you did a partial revert (my apologies), but 11 days is still a bit to undo someone's changes per WP:SILENCE. In my humble opinion it should have just been taken to the talk-page for discussion in retrospect. - Knowledgekid87 (talk) 20:40, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
@Knowledgekid87, I'd accept your apology if you also struck the incorrect assertion.
As to WP:SILENCE, I see nothing there to support the claim that a mere 11 days is enough to assume implicit consensus on a very low traffic page, especially when the edit summaries gave so little info in what was actually done. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 21:44, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I struck all mention, I don't think it is a central point anyways now that I have looked things over again. - Knowledgekid87 (talk) 22:05, 23 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Note to closing admin. I don't want in any way to prejudge the outcome ... but if you close this discussion as delete, please can you not remove the backlinks? I have a bot (BHGbot 4) which allows me to easily replace them with links to the next most specific portal(s), without creating duplicate entries.
In this case I think that the appropriate new links would be to Portal:United States. Alternative suggestions welcome. --BrownHairedGirl (talk) • (contribs) 00:19, 24 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete: Not a broad enough topic for a portal. ToThAc (talk) 21:12, 25 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]
  • Keep on the grounds of capricious and arbitrary standards with no apparent basis in policy and no broad community consensus. Page views has nothing to do with deletion policy and never has. The "effort applied" standard would work equally to everything ever written about the Kardashians and professional wrestling, but we don't delete those either, much to my dismay. The words used in the nomination are "use common sense" but what it actually says is here are some completely random standards I made up one day, so let's use those as if they are policy.
Dearest cart and horse you seem to have gotten things the wrong way round. In the absence of a community consensus for a deletion policy, go find a community consensus for a deletion policy. Don't instead roll a few 20-sided die and decide that those are the standards we should be applying, 100 views, 2 maintainers, 6 partridges, 2 pair trees, and a business proposal filled out in triplicate with quarterly wage reports. And especially when you are not even consistent in applying your arbitrary and capricious standard across discussions: any portal with fewer than 25 a day can be considered to have failed but we should delete this one anyway.
If this is par for the course on portal deletions, then no wonder this is so controversial, because we can't even be consistent in applying our capricious and arbitrary standards. GMGtalk 19:50, 29 November 2019 (UTC)[reply]